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7 Respiratory Meds For NCLEX - Nursing Priorities & NCLEX Traps

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Manage episode 518166862 series 3700394
Content provided by Audience AI and Brooke Wallace. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Audience AI and Brooke Wallace or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Episode Notes

Memory map: AIS-BPMA

A — Albuterol (SABA, rescue): Give for acute wheeze/bronchospasm. Hold if HR ≥ 120. Assess lungs, O₂ sat, and heart rate. Can increase blood glucose; caution with digoxin.

I — Ipratropium (anticholinergic): COPD maintenance med. Watch for dry mouth, constipation, urinary retention. Avoid with glaucoma or enlarged prostate.

S — Salmeterol (LABA): Controller only, not rescue. Must always be paired with an inhaled corticosteroid.

B — Budesonide (ICS): Long-term inflammation control. Rinse mouth after each use to prevent thrush. If switching from systemic steroids, taper slowly.

P — Prednisone (systemic steroid): Used short-term for severe flares. Monitor glucose, GI bleeding, infection risk, mood, fluid retention. Never stop abruptly.

M — Montelukast (leukotriene modifier): Prevents asthma symptoms. Black box: mood changes, depression, suicidal thoughts—report immediately.

A — Acetylcysteine (mucolytic/antidote): Breaks up thick mucus; also antidote for acetaminophen toxicity. Give bronchodilator first before nebulizing. Smells like rotten eggs—warn patients.

Administration sequence:
Bronchodilator first → then ICS. Wait 1–2 minutes between meds.

Peak flow zones:

Green (80–100%): Continue usual meds.

Yellow (50–80%): Add rescue inhaler; call provider if persistent.

Red (<50%): Emergency—use rescue inhaler, start oral steroid if ordered, seek care.

Clinical context:

COPD = respiratory acidosis: Clear airway (ipratropium + acetylcysteine).

Asthma attack = respiratory alkalosis: Use albuterol first; monitor HR closely.

Pediatrics:

Use spacer/mask with inhalers.

Monitor growth with long-term ICS use.

Montelukast granules → mix with soft food only.

Prednisone dosing is weight-based.

Pregnancy:

Continue controller meds—budesonide preferred.

Uncontrolled asthma is riskier than medication exposure.

Delegation:

RN: Assessment, judgment, teaching, setting hold parameters.

UAP (if trained): May give neb after RN assessment; RN still responsible.

Quickfire NCLEX Scenarios:

Ipratropium → urinary retention → assess bladder.

Acetylcysteine → new wheeze → stop treatment, give rescue inhaler.

Prednisone taper → glucose 250 → recheck, assess infection, confirm taper.

Need to reach out? Send an email to Brooke at [email protected]

  continue reading

43 episodes

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Manage episode 518166862 series 3700394
Content provided by Audience AI and Brooke Wallace. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Audience AI and Brooke Wallace or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Episode Notes

Memory map: AIS-BPMA

A — Albuterol (SABA, rescue): Give for acute wheeze/bronchospasm. Hold if HR ≥ 120. Assess lungs, O₂ sat, and heart rate. Can increase blood glucose; caution with digoxin.

I — Ipratropium (anticholinergic): COPD maintenance med. Watch for dry mouth, constipation, urinary retention. Avoid with glaucoma or enlarged prostate.

S — Salmeterol (LABA): Controller only, not rescue. Must always be paired with an inhaled corticosteroid.

B — Budesonide (ICS): Long-term inflammation control. Rinse mouth after each use to prevent thrush. If switching from systemic steroids, taper slowly.

P — Prednisone (systemic steroid): Used short-term for severe flares. Monitor glucose, GI bleeding, infection risk, mood, fluid retention. Never stop abruptly.

M — Montelukast (leukotriene modifier): Prevents asthma symptoms. Black box: mood changes, depression, suicidal thoughts—report immediately.

A — Acetylcysteine (mucolytic/antidote): Breaks up thick mucus; also antidote for acetaminophen toxicity. Give bronchodilator first before nebulizing. Smells like rotten eggs—warn patients.

Administration sequence:
Bronchodilator first → then ICS. Wait 1–2 minutes between meds.

Peak flow zones:

Green (80–100%): Continue usual meds.

Yellow (50–80%): Add rescue inhaler; call provider if persistent.

Red (<50%): Emergency—use rescue inhaler, start oral steroid if ordered, seek care.

Clinical context:

COPD = respiratory acidosis: Clear airway (ipratropium + acetylcysteine).

Asthma attack = respiratory alkalosis: Use albuterol first; monitor HR closely.

Pediatrics:

Use spacer/mask with inhalers.

Monitor growth with long-term ICS use.

Montelukast granules → mix with soft food only.

Prednisone dosing is weight-based.

Pregnancy:

Continue controller meds—budesonide preferred.

Uncontrolled asthma is riskier than medication exposure.

Delegation:

RN: Assessment, judgment, teaching, setting hold parameters.

UAP (if trained): May give neb after RN assessment; RN still responsible.

Quickfire NCLEX Scenarios:

Ipratropium → urinary retention → assess bladder.

Acetylcysteine → new wheeze → stop treatment, give rescue inhaler.

Prednisone taper → glucose 250 → recheck, assess infection, confirm taper.

Need to reach out? Send an email to Brooke at [email protected]

  continue reading

43 episodes

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